Chun v. Del Cid

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 2019
DocketB295140
StatusPublished

This text of Chun v. Del Cid (Chun v. Del Cid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chun v. Del Cid, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 4/26/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

BRIAN Y. CHUN, B295140

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BV032724) v.

FREDY DEL CID et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

B295141 BRIAN Y. CHUN, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. BV032723)

v.

GLORIA SALAVERRIA,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Appellate Division, Sanjay T. Kumar, Alex Ricciardulli and Tony L. Richardson, Judges. Reversed. Eviction Defense Network, Elena I. Popp and Sean Chandra for Defendant and Appellants. Law Office of Allen R. King and Allen R. King for Plaintiff and Respondent. Michael N. Feuer, City Attorney (Los Angeles), Blithe S. Bock, Assistant City Attorney, Deborah Breithaupt, Elaine Zhong and Jonathan H. Eisenman, Deputy City Attorneys, as Amicus Curiae upon request of the Court of Appeal.

INTRODUCTION Defendants and appellants Gloria Salaverria and Fredy, Furgencia, and Elmer Del Cid (collectively, Tenants) rented bedrooms in a residential building located on Hoover Street in Los Angeles (Property), owned by plaintiff and respondent Brian Y. Chun (Landlord). Salaverria rented one bedroom, and the Del Cids together rented one or more separate bedrooms. Landlord brought an unlawful detainer action against Tenants, which was tried on stipulated facts. The sole issue was whether the Property fell within the single–family dwelling exemption to the Rent Stabilization Ordinance of the City of 1 Los Angeles (Ordinance). (§ 151.00 et seq.) Under the relevant definitions of section 12.03 (incorporated by reference into the Ordinance), the exemption applies to a “detached dwelling containing only one dwelling unit,” a “dwelling unit” being defined as “two or more

1 Subsequent undesignated section references are to the Los Angeles Municipal Code.

2 rooms, one of which is a kitchen, designed for occupancy by one family for living and sleeping purposes.” A “family” means “[o]ne or more persons living together in a dwelling unit, with common access to, and common use of all living, kitchen, and eating areas within the dwelling unit.” The undisputed facts established that the Property was originally constructed in 1908 as single–family dwelling. However, in 1946, the Property, then a being used as a rooming house for 6 households, was expanded to accommodate 7 households in 10 rooms. Currently the Property has 9 bedrooms, at least two bathrooms, and one kitchen. Four of the bedrooms are being separately rented to four separate households. The tenants share access to the bathrooms and kitchen, but they do not have access to each other’s rooms. Rather, each tenant has exclusive use of his or her own bedroom, which is equipped with a lock to exclude others. On these facts, the trial court ruled that the Property does not meet the definitional criteria of the single–family dwelling exemption. On Landord’s appeal, the Appellate Division of the Superior Court reversed. We granted Tenants’ petition to transfer the case to this court. We now reverse the appellate division. In particular, we hold that regardless of the original design and use of the Property, its current configuration (nine bedrooms, two bathrooms, and one kitchen) and current use for occupancy (four individual bedrooms rented to separate households who share the kitchen and bathrooms, but who alone have exclusive access to and use of their rooms) does not qualify for the single–family dwelling exemption from the Ordinance, because it 3 is not a “detached dwelling containing only one dwelling unit” within the meaning of section 12.03.

BACKGROUND Trial Court Proceedings In their answers to Landlord’s unlawful detainer complaints, Tenants asserted as an affirmative defense that Landlord’s demand for 2 possession violated the Ordinance. In March 2018, separate bench trials were conducted on identical stipulated facts and testimony. The parties stipulated to the following facts: “1. The [P]roperty that is the subject of this action was originally constructed as a Dwelling, one family; “2. The [P]roperty . . . is located in the City of Los Angeles; “3. The [P]roperty . . . was built and/or has a certificate of occupancy that was first issued before October 1978; “4. The housing accommodation that is the subject of this action is a room in a dwelling, with access to a shared bathroom and shared kitchen; “5. The [P]roperty . . . has 9 bedrooms; “6. The [P]roperty . . . currently has 4 bedrooms that are each being separately rented to four separate households/families. “7. The [P]roperty . . . has one kitchen; “8. The [P]roperty . . . has at least 2 bathrooms.”

2 The two unlawful detainer cases involve the same plaintiff, the same legal theories, the same residential structure (although different bedrooms), nearly identical complaints and amended answers, and the same stipulated facts. Accordingly, unless otherwise indicated, references to trial and appellate proceedings refer to both the Salaverria and Del Cid actions. To that end, on its own motion, this Court ordered the appeals consolidated for purposes of oral argument and decision.

4 The parties also stipulated that four families resided in the Property, each of which had exclusive use of their own bedrooms, equipped with locks to exclude all others. Susan Gosden, Assistant Director of the Los Angeles Housing and Community Investment Department (Housing Department), testified in the Del Cid action, and her testimony was received by stipulation in the 3 Salaverria case. One of Gosden’s responsibilities is to determine which properties are subject to the Ordinance, and which were not. She explained that the Property was originally built in 1908 as a single– family residence and used for residential purposes until at least until 1926 (when a permit was issued to add a garage). Sometime between 1926 and 1946, the Property began being used as a “rooming house.” In 1946, the Property, then a rooming house for 6 families, was expanded 4 to accommodate 7 families in 10 rooms. In March 2018, the Housing

3 The record does not contain a reporter’s transcript of Godson’s testimony. However, the parties do not dispute the content of her testimony. Our factual summary is drawn from the trial court’s written statement of decision.

4 Gosden reviewed and testified regarding the following documents: a printout from the County Assessor’s Office reflecting that the Property was originally built in 1908 as a single–family residence (Exh. A); a building permit from the City showing that a garage was built on the Property in 1926, at which time the Property was being used for residential purposes (Exh. B); a 1946 building permit to modify the existing house stating that Property, then being used as a rooming house for six families, was expanded to accommodate seven families in 10 rooms (Exh. C); and Gosden’s March 2, 2018 letter opining that the Property was a rooming house and subject to the Ordinance.

5 Department issued a “determination letter,” authored by Gosden, in which she opined that the Property is subject to the Ordinance, and that the 60–day Notice was an insufficient basis for Tenants’ eviction under several provisions of the Ordinance. Trial proceeded on the premise, undisputed by the parties, that the Property was a “‘housing accommodation’” subject to the Ordinance. The issue to be determined by the trial court was whether the Property fell within the exemption for a single–family dwelling. The Landlord argued that the Property fell within the exemption because the structure was originally “designed” in 1908 as a single–family dwelling. In its detailed written ruling, the trial court disagreed.

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Chun v. Del Cid, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chun-v-del-cid-calctapp-2019.